Don Quixote - Part I - Page 260/400

The landlord was carrying away the valise and the books, but the curate

said to him, "Wait; I want to see what those papers are that are written

in such a good hand." The landlord taking them out handed them to him to

read, and he perceived they were a work of about eight sheets of

manuscript, with, in large letters at the beginning, the title of "Novel

of the Ill-advised Curiosity." The curate read three or four lines to

himself, and said, "I must say the title of this novel does not seem to

me a bad one, and I feel an inclination to read it all." To which the

landlord replied, "Then your reverence will do well to read it, for I can

tell you that some guests who have read it here have been much pleased

with it, and have begged it of me very earnestly; but I would not give

it, meaning to return it to the person who forgot the valise, books, and

papers here, for maybe he will return here some time or other; and though

I know I shall miss the books, faith I mean to return them; for though I

am an innkeeper, still I am a Christian."

"You are very right, friend," said the curate; "but for all that, if the

novel pleases me you must let me copy it."

"With all my heart," replied the host.

While they were talking Cardenio had taken up the novel and begun to read

it, and forming the same opinion of it as the curate, he begged him to

read it so that they might all hear it.

"I would read it," said the curate, "if the time would not be better

spent in sleeping."

"It will be rest enough for me," said Dorothea, "to while away the time

by listening to some tale, for my spirits are not yet tranquil enough to

let me sleep when it would be seasonable."

"Well then, in that case," said the curate, "I will read it, if it were

only out of curiosity; perhaps it may contain something pleasant."

Master Nicholas added his entreaties to the same effect, and Sancho too;

seeing which, and considering that he would give pleasure to all, and

receive it himself, the curate said, "Well then, attend to me everyone,

for the novel begins thus."